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Vietnam 1954-1975. Vietnam. The Beginning. May 7, 1954 Vietnamese forces occupy the French command post at Dien Bien Phu and French cease fire. Battle lasted 55 days 3,000 French killed/ 8,000 wounded 8,000 Vietnamese killed/ 12,000 wounded Shatters French resolved to carry on the war.
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The Beginning • May 7, 1954 Vietnamese forces occupy the French command post at Dien Bien Phu and French cease fire. • Battle lasted 55 days • 3,000 French killed/ 8,000 wounded • 8,000 Vietnamese killed/ 12,000 wounded • Shatters French resolved to carry on the war.
HO CHI MINH “If we have to fight, we will fight. You will kill ten of our men and we will kill one of yours, and in the end it will be you who tires of it.”
July 1954 Geneva Conference • Geneva Accords Signed by North and South Vietnamese and the French. *U.S. refused to sign Accord called for election for leader of unified Vietnam • U.S. and South Vietnam did not want an election • The Viet Cong began to rebel against the S. Vietnamese • Headed by President Ngo Dinh Diem.
Some Jargon To Know • VIET MINH/NVA: North Vietnamese Military (communist) • VIET CONG: South Vietnamese Communists • South Vietnamese: Side of the U.S. • Not Communist
Ho Chi Minh Trail • 1959 • North Vietnamese group 559 formed to create supply route from North Vietnam to Vietcong forces in the south. • It was along the Cambodian border and later becomes the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
1960-1961 • Eisenhower sends 675 Advisors to South Vietnam • Late 1961 JFK orders more help for South Vietnam • New equipment • 3,000 support personal and military advisors • Helicopters along with 400 U.S. pilots
January 12, 1962: Americans first combat missions against the Vietcong • Early 1963: Operation Ranch Hand • *Agent Orange • January 2,1963:Victory at Ap Bac Raised morale and drove recruitment for the Vietcong • November 1,1963: South Vietnamese generals overthrew Diem • *Diem and Brother killed the next day. • *U.S. backed the Coup
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution • April 1964 • Two U.S. Aircraft Carriers arrive off Vietnamese coast • August 4, 1964 • U.S.S. Maddox attacked in Gulf of Tonkin • In retaliation: the U.S. bombs two naval bases and an oil facility. • August 7,1964: U.S. Congress passes the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution • Gives power to President to take “All necessary measures” and “To prevent any further aggression.”
1965-1966 • February 13, 1965: President Johnson authorizes Operation Rolling Thunder • March 6, 1965: President Johnson sends U.S. Marines to Da Nang, South Vietnam. • Marines were 1st ground troops in the war. • January 6, 1966 U.S. Forces launch Operation Crimp • Deploying nearly 8,000 troops • Largest American Operation
End of 1966 • American forces: 385,000 • 60,000 Sailors off shore • 6,000 Americans killed • 30,000 wounded • 61,000 Vietcong killed • Vietcong Troops 280,000
1966 • U.S. uses chemical defoliants (Agent Orange)
1967 • April 24, 1967: American attacks on North Vietnam’s Airfields begin • By end of year all but one has been hit • May 1967: Americans shoot down 26 NVA planes • Decreases pilot strength by half
Tet Offensive Begins • January 21, 1968Marine Base at Khe Sahn attacked • 18 Marines killed instantly • Initial attack lasts 2 days • January 30-31st Tet Offensiv • More than 100 cities ,towns, bases, and the US embassy in Saigon are attacked by 67,000 North Vietnamese and Vietcong • 37,000 Vietcong are killed • 2,500 Americans are killed • Serious blow to public support even though we destroyed VC and debilitated North Vietnamese • Domestic U.S. Reaction: Disbelief, Anger, Distrust of Johnson Administration • Seen as a defeat by media
Johnson’s popularity dropped in 1968 from 48% to 36%.
My Lai Massacre • March 16, 1968 My Lai Massacre • U.S. Charlie Company kills about 200 civilians
The Beginning of the End • April 8, 1968: U.S. Forces in Operation Pegasus • Retake Route 9 • 77 day battle • Biggest battle of the Vietnam War • February 8, 1970—Operation Lam Son 719 • S. Vietnamese Divisions drive into Laos • Walked into a trap • 9,000 S. Vietnamese killed or wounded • More than 2/3 armored vehicles destroy • Hundreds of U.S. Helicopters and planes destroyed Led by colonel M. Gibson
1969 • Peace Talks in Paris • Nixon orders secret bombing of Cambodia • Nixon announces withdrawal of 25,000 troops • Troops down to 139,000 • Policy of “Vietnamization” begins • Ho Chi Minh dies
1970 • National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger begins secret negotiations with Le Duc Tho • Another 150,000 troops withdrawn by years end • Troop strength falls to 280,000
Summer 1971-Operation Ranch Hand Ends • Sprayed 11 million gallons of AO • Contains 240 lbs. of Dioxin • 1/7 total area lay to waste • December 13, 1972 Paris Peace talks Breaks down • December 18, 1972 Operation Linebacker • Bombing of North Vietnam • Lasts for 12 days • 120 B-52’s • 20,000 tons of bombs • 26 planes lost • 93 airmen killed
Peace Talks • January 8, 1973—Paris Peace talks resume • April 1 – All U.S. POWs released • January 27, 1973 – Cease-fire signed • March 1973 – Last American combat soldiers leave but Military advisors and Marines stay • Protecting U.S. installations
The Fall • Over 3 million Americans served in war • Almost 58,000 dead • Over 1000 Missing In Action • 150,000 Americans seriously wounded • $150,000,000,000 in U.S. spending • April 29, 1975 U.S. Begin Airlift out of Saigon • U.S. Marines and Air Force are used • From Carriers off shore • Took 18 hours • Over 1,000 American Civilians • Nearly 7,000 S. Vietnamese Refugees • April 30, 1975-Two Marines killed at Saigon Airport • Last Americans to die in Vietnam War • At dawn the last Marines leave embassy
The End • North Vietnam resumes war against South • South Vietnam collapses • Saigon renamed Ho Chi Minh City • 15 Years of War – Nearly a million NVA killed • 1/4 of a million SVA soldiers killed • Hundreds of thousands civilians killed